Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
After going through this city, US 50 is routed along I-44 up to Sunset Hills. It heads east and merges with US 61 and US 67. These three concurrent U.S. routes run this way until after the interchange with I-55. US 61 and US 67 split off, leaving US 50 to merge with I-255 to cross the Mississippi River on the Jefferson Barracks Bridge in St. Louis.
In Harrisonville it has a brief concurrency with Interstate 49/U.S. Route 71 and Missouri Route 7. After splitting from I-49/US 71, it runs east into Johnson County, Missouri, crossing over near La Tour. It serves as the southern terminus of Route 131 before crossing Route 13 north of Postoak. It then runs through Leeton before entering Henry ...
I-435/US 50 travels concurrently to Kansas City, Missouri. US 69 in Overland Park Missouri I-49 / I-435 / I-470 / US 71 in Kansas City. I-470/US 50 travel concurrently to Lee's Summit. US 65 in Sedalia US 54 / US 63 in Jefferson City. US 50/US 63 travels concurrently to north of Westphalia. I-44 south-southwest of Villa Ridge.
The Kansas City area can boast more than 30 restaurants that have been around for at least five decades. ... 21c Museum Hotel closed it for a major remodeling in 2018. ... It’s 50 years now and ...
Forest City spur Route 1F: 1922 1926* → US 60 (part) Joplin to Kansas; typo for 16, shown as 16 on the 1923 map Route 2: 1926 ← 60 now Route 2: 1922 1926* → US 40 Route 3: 1926 ← 67 now Route 3: 1922 1926* → US 65 Route 4: 1922 1959 → US 136 (part) Route 4A: 1922 1929 → 85 Evona spur Route 4B: 1926 ← 9 (part) 1929 → 81 Kahoka ...
In the 1960s, there was a Spooklight museum at the eastern end of E 50. In the Popular Mechanics article, Gannon called it a "tourist trap that doesn't quite make it". It had a three-inch (76 mm) telescope that allowed people to view the light for 25 cents, but the owners had set it up indoors to look through a half inch hole in the wall, which ...
Vaile was born in Vermont in 1831; he graduated in law from the University of Louisville and moved to Kansas City, Missouri in 1859, [1] before finally settling in Independence in 1870. [2] A "strong supporter of the abolitionism movement" with a passion for politics, he was among the founders of the Republican Party in Jackson County. [ 1 ]
The site's old power building features a geological and mining history museum and interpretive center focusing on the state's historic Old Lead Belt. [4] The plant was built by the Federal Lead Co. in 1906-1907 and subsequently bought by competitor St. Joseph Lead Company in 1923.